Before the twisting towers, before the dragon scales, before Barcelona was dotted with Gaudí’s surreal visions, there was the Casa Vicens. Tucked into a quiet corner of Gràcia, Casa Vicens was Gaudí’s first major commission. He was just 30, fresh out of school, unknown and untested. And yet, he didn’t play it safe. He went bold. Wild with colour. Drenched in symbolism. Inspired by palms, carnations, Persian domes, and his wildest dreams. It doesn’t look like anything else in the city. Even now.
When I stepped inside in 2024, it felt like entering the pages of someone’s imagination, bursting with colour, alive with freedom, full of the energy of an artist on the edge of discovering his voice. And yet, somehow, it remains one of Gaudí’s most overlooked creations in Barcelona. Honestly? If I had to choose just one Gaudí site to recommend, this would be it. This self-guided tour will take you through every vibrant detail, from the tiled garden fences to the honeycomb ceilings and storybook bedrooms!



History of Casa Vicens
At the time he began work on Casa Vicens, Antoni Gaudí was just 30 years old, ambitious, fresh out of architecture school, and still largely unknown. He was a young architect with big ideas and a deep love for nature, geometry, and craft. Born in Reus (or possibly nearby Riudoms) in 1852, Gaudí had grown up with a father who was a coppersmith, surrounded by tools, patterns, and the tactile world of making things by hand. His health was fragile, so he spent long stretches of childhood in the countryside, observing the natural forms that would later shape his architecture: spirals, leaves, honeycombs, bones.
When he graduated from the Barcelona School of Architecture in 1878, his diploma famously came with a caveat. The director allegedly said, “We have given this academic title either to a madman or a genius, only time will tell.” Casa Vicens was Gaudí’s first chance to prove which.

It was a small commission, a summer home for a tile manufacturer, tucked in what was then the independent village of Gràcia, but Gaudí didn’t treat it like a side project. He approached it like a manifesto. At the time Gaudí began designing Casa Vicens, the Gràcia neighbourhood wasn’t even part of Barcelona yet, it was its own town, with cobbled lanes, convent gardens, and a calm that felt far from the chaos of the city. This made it a perfect setting for a summer home. The style Gaudí chose was equally independent: an eclectic blend of Neo-Mudéjar, Islamic, and Oriental influences, layered with the vibrant textures of ceramic, brick, and wrought iron.

Restoration
After spending over a century as a private residence, Casa Vicens underwent a careful restoration between 2015 and 2017. Led by architects Elías Torres and José Antonio Martínez Lapeña, the project peeled back years of alterations to recover Gaudí’s original vision. Lost elements like latticework and garden features were reconstructed, while details such as stucco vines and ceramic tiles were revived using traditional 19th-century methods. Once hidden from public view, the house is now open to all, and it’s easy to see why it was declared a Historic-Artistic Monument in 1969 and earned UNESCO World Heritage status in 2005.

The Façade
Before stepping through the doors, take a moment to stand back and soak it all in. The main façade of Casa Vicens faces what was once the lush summer garden, a detail that was far from accidental. Gaudí meticulously studied how light and air would flow through the structure, ensuring this summer home would remain cool, bright, and comfortable during the hottest months of the year. After all, this was long before air conditioning, a luxury that many in Barcelona are sorely lacking.

The entire exterior is a carnival of colour and texture. You’ll see an almost obsessive layering of materials: wrought iron twisted into palm fronds, warm terracotta brickwork, painted wood, and most iconic of all, green and white checkerboard tiles emblazoned with Moorish carnation motifs. These tiles aren’t just for show. They anchor the house in a conversation with Islamic, Eastern, and Mudejar traditions, while also showcasing Gaudí’s signature flair for merging art with local craft.



The garden gate, made of wrought iron by Joan Oñós and based on a clay model by sculptor Llorenç Matamala, showcases a repeating pattern of palm leaves and marigold. That palm-shaped wrought iron gate at the entrance wasn’t a design flourish pulled from fantasy; it came straight from life. Gaudí took inspiration from a real palm tree that once stood on the site. And the tiled carnation motifs came from the same yellow flowers blooming wild across the property before construction began. Guadi decided to honour them with every ceramic repeat, a natural motif that echoes throughout the entire house and garden.

The Garden
Before stepping inside, take time to explore the interior garden. In the late 19th century, the garden was far larger, a sprawling sanctuary that included fountains, plant beds, and even a waterfall beneath a soaring parabolic arch. These elements weren’t just aesthetic. They helped cool the house, refresh the air, and connect daily life to the rhythms of nature.

Today, what remains is a thoughtfully recreated 300-square-meter garden oasis nestled in the heart of Gràcia. Beds of Mediterranean plants, elegant urns, and a landscaped rooftop echo the original design. A towering magnolia and an old oak still stand tall, living relics of Gaudí’s time. The other greenery was selected during restoration to reflect 19th-century Catalan horticulture.


Tiled benches line the walkways, inviting you to sit and linger. The wrought-iron gate and garden fences, twisting with vegetal motifs, seem to have grown straight out of the earth.

One of the most charming features on the exterior of the enclosed porch is the frieze that runs along the gallery’s exterior walls, inscribed with fragments of Catalan folk verses. On the southeast side, the sun is summoned with “Sol, solet, vinam a veure” (“Sun, little sun, come and see me”). The northwest wall whispers “Oh, la sombra de l’istiu” (“Oh, summer shadow”), while the southwest glows with the warmth of hearth and heart: “De la llart lo foch, visca lo foch de l’amor” (“The fire of the hearth, long live the fire of love”).

The Ground Floor
Foyer and Dining Room
The first level of the home was where the hub of daily life for the Vicens family occurred. And the most important space was the dining room. It’s the largest and most decorative space on the ground floor, surrounded by a suite of interconnected rooms: the enclosed porch, the smoking room, the foyer, and the original kitchen. Gaudí envisioned this entire level as an immersive garden, not one outside, but one within. Every tile, ceiling, and carved panel draws inspiration from the natural world, transforming the act of living into something poetic.


Inside the 32-square-meter dining room, you’re immediately immersed in a world of texture and nature-inspired artistry. A living tapestry. Along the upper walls, golden backgrounds shimmer behind delicate stucco ivy that seems to climb and curl its way around the space. Stucco was a versatile medium. It could be sculpted wet, carved, or layered with colour. That flexibility let Gaudí mimic the delicate veins of a leaf or the soft curve of a fern in high relief across walls and ceilings. And unlike imported materials or mass-produced mouldings, stucco was made and shaped on-site by local artisans, often under Gaudí’s close direction. That made every detail feel bespoke, crafted, and human. In Casa Vicens, the result is remarkable: walls that seem to be a living creature.

Look up, and you’ll see ivy starting to unfurl overhead. Roses wind their way around the crown moulding, while seashells seem to bloom at the ceiling’s edge. Between the beams, papier-mâché garlands of fruit and arbutus leaves drape like a suspended garden, forming a rich, decorative canopy above.


Beneath your feet is something remarkable: a genuine Roman-style opus tessellatum mosaic floor, its geometric precision adding a classical counterpoint to the whimsical decor above.

Flanking the entry to the adjoining tribune space are two vertical panels adorned with incredibly lifelike flora and fauna, painted by artist Francesc Torrescassana. Birds fill the scene, sparrows, hummingbirds, herons, cranes, and flamingos, twenty-four in total. All appear mid-flight, wings outstretched in motion, save for a small group of flamingos standing still at the base. Leaves rustle as if stirred by a passing breeze.



Against the far wall, a richly detailed fireplace anchors the room, its surround crafted in sculpted, glazed ceramic relief, warming the space both literally and visually.

The Enclosed Porch
From the dining room, you can step out through either of the double doors onto the enclosed porch. Wrapping around the edge of the house, the porch serves as a transitional space between indoors and out. With wooden slatted shutters that open onto the garden and sgraffito detailing overhead, the porch was designed to invite in breezes and birdsong, creating a gentle threshold between the home’s inner sanctuary and the lush world outside.

At the center of the porch stands a curious and beautifully layered fountain. It begins at the base with a Plateresque baptismal font, round in shape, ornate in detail, into which a square platform tiled in sunflower-leaf motifs has been placed. Rising from this is a slender marble column, topped by a circular basin adorned with the faces of cherubs. Water spills gently from their mouths. Hovering above, a delicate elliptical metal mesh hangs like a spider’s web catching morning dew.



Restoration of the Lattice Work
Framing the structure were two-meter-wide wooden lattice screens that filtered light and softened the view like something out of a dream. These slatted panels were inspired by Eastern design principles and closely resemble shitomido, the adjustable shutters found in traditional Japanese homes. Gaudí likely encountered these during a Japanese architecture exhibition held in Barcelona in 1881, and as with so much of his work, he absorbed the idea and made it his own.
But these delicate lattices disappeared for decades. After Casa Vicens passed to new owners, a major renovation transformed the home’s structure, and its soul. What had been a unified family retreat was carved into three separate apartments, one per floor. Gaudí’s breathable latticework was replaced with solid glass panes. The result was a more insulated, climate-controlled space, but it sacrificed the breezy, open-air feeling that once connected the interior to the garden. Perhaps the greatest loss was the removal of the central fountain, once the sensory heart of the grandstand. Thankfully, the recent restoration has brought them both back. The lattices once again play with shadow and breeze, and the fountain sings quietly, just as Gaudí intended.


Wooden benches line either side of the fountain, offering a shaded, serene space to sit and breathe. Overhead, the sgraffito ceiling blossoms with curling pomegranates and soft hydrangeas, their forms etched into layers of plaster and then painted to enhance the texture and depth. But it’s the illusionistic painting between these floral borders that truly draws the eye. Here, Gaudí employed a technique known as trompe-l’oeil, a French term meaning “deceive the eye.” It’s an art method that uses realistic imagery to create the optical illusion of three-dimensional space on a flat surface. In this case, painted panels mimic open sky, as if the roof had peeled away.


The Smoking Room
Beside the dining room is one of the most entrancing spaces in the entire house, the smoking room. Stepping inside, the atmosphere thickens. The colours deepen into rich jewel tones, the light becomes softer, more sacred. It doesn’t just feel like a lounge. It feels like a chapel. Not one of worship in the traditional sense, but a sanctuary of contemplation, of storytelling, of slow smoke curling into the air while conversations drift like incense. Inspired by Islamic and Orientalist architecture, Gaudí designed this room as a deliberate escape. Every wall is cloaked in geometric tilework, bold in colour and repetition, wrapping the space like a prayer rug rendered in ceramic. Benches along the walls invite pause and stillness.

But the ceiling is what transforms the room entirely. It rises above in a glimmering canopy of muqarnas, a form of ornamental vaulting borrowed from Islamic design, reimagined in Gaudí’s own language. Crafted from papier-mâché, these scale-like forms shimmer in tones of green, blue, and bronze, catching the light as if the room itself were breathing. There’s a surreal, almost aquatic beauty to it, like being inside the ribcage of a dragon or under a sacred palm frond in some mythical garden.




The First Floor
The Master Bedroom
Heading upstairs, we enter the first floor, where the family’s bedrooms and personal spaces are located. The primary bedroom is thoughtfully split into two zones, each defined by a different colour scheme and decorative theme. One side blooms in soft pinks, with delicate sgraffito blackberry vines crawling across the walls and ceramic ceiling coffers sprinkled with ivy motifs.

The adjacent half immerses you in serene blues, ornamented with passionflower and foliage designs. This duality feels intentional, playful, even poetic, offering subtly different moods in one unified space.


The Pink Room
The pink room feels like a delicate bloom. Soft rose-toned walls are graced with curling blackberry vine sgraffito, reaching across plastered surfaces like nature’s own wallpaper. Above, the ceiling coffers are edged with whimsical ivy motifs, while the terracotta-tiled floor grounds the space in earthy warmth. A private terrace overlooks the garden, encouraging quiet morning reveries and making the entire nook feel as though it belongs to a child’s daydream



The Blue Bedroom
Directly across the hall lies the blue bedroom. Above, a ceramic coffered ceiling stretches out like a flowering canopy. Blackberry vines twist between the beams, forming a patterned tangle of fruit and foliage. But what really draws the eye are the passionflowers, blooming prominently among the decorative elements.

Known as the “flower of Christ,” the passionflower carries centuries of spiritual symbolism. Its unusual structure has long been interpreted as a metaphor for the crucifixion: a crown of thorns, wounds, nails, and more, all hidden within a bloom. Gaudí, who was as much a mystic as he was a modernist, wove this layered symbolism into the very bones of the room.


The Domed Room
At the far end of the first floor is a curious, round room unlike any other in the house. Often referred to simply as the domed room, this small salon is capped by a shallow, circular dome that gives the entire space a softly celestial feel. Step inside and it almost feels like you’ve wandered into a private observatory, or a chapel, if the stars were made of plaster and paint.

The ceiling is the main event. Its softly vaulted surface is delicately stenciled with floral motifs, subtle, not showy, and rimmed by fine mouldings that create a rhythmic, almost musical repetition around the curve. There’s a quiet intimacy to the scale here. The circular shape makes sound travel in a hushed, echoing way, and the filtered light gives the room a constant dusk-like glow, as if time slows the moment you enter.


Originally, this space served as a sitting room, a place for reading, writing, or simply retreating from the busier parts of the house. You can imagine its use shifting throughout the day, from a sunlit morning nook to an evening hideaway where conversations unfolded slowly, voices lowered by instinct. The room connects to the other bedrooms but feels psychologically distant, a self-contained world of calm.

The Bathrooms
It’s easy to overlook the bathroom in a house so rich with ornament, but pause here, and you’ll realize it’s one of Casa Vicens’ quiet marvels. Not just for its aesthetic beauty, but because it represented a level of modern comfort that was rare for the time. Running water in the late 19th century wasn’t standard in most private homes, especially not in summer residences. But Gaudí, ever ahead of the curve, incorporated a fully functioning bathroom into the Vicens family’s first floor. This wasn’t just plumbing, it was an embrace of a new way of living. Clean, efficient, hygienic. For the family, it meant cool baths on hot days, a private space of calm in a season of heat.

The room itself is a small jewel box. Sunlight filters in to illuminate the glossy white and blue ceramic tiles that wrap the walls. These weren’t chosen at random, Gaudí designed them in a rhythmic pattern that echoes waves and sky. The entire room feels aquatic, almost like stepping into a tiled grotto. It’s airy, fresh, and in harmony with the rest of the home’s botanical spirit.



Terrace Upper
Just off the first floor bedrooms lies one of the most poetic architectural gestures in Casa Vicens, a shared terrace that links the private sleeping quarters to the natural world outside. The terrace wraps along the garden-facing side of the house, framed by slender columns and richly patterned ceramic tiles that continue the floral themes found throughout the home.

Along the low walls and built-in planters, you’ll notice something especially striking: ceramic sunflowers arranged like sculpted guardians of the greenery. Their bold yellow faces bloom against a backdrop of blue and white, brightening the terrace with a permanent sense of summer. These sunflower ornaments aren’t just decorative, they’re part of Gaudí’s larger philosophy of embedding nature, quite literally, into architecture.


The Attic
Originally designed as a functional space for household staff, the attic of Casa Vicens is now home to a permanent exhibition that offers deeper insight into Gaudí’s creative universe. This level is organized around thematic displays that allow visitors to explore the rich tapestry of materials, influences, and techniques Gaudí employed in his first residential project. Tables showcase everything from early ceramic samples to blueprints, historical photographs, and scale models. You can trace how the house evolved over time, spot the changes made during its many renovations, and compare the original architectural plans to what stands today.

One highlight is the facsimile of the Manuscrito de Reus, one of the rare written reflections Gaudí left behind. In it, he outlined his vision for domestic architecture. On a page titled La casa pairal, or “The family home”, he described a house as nothing less than “a family’s tiny nation.”


Also on display are select pieces of original furniture Gaudí designed specifically for the Vicens family’s other residence in Alella.


The Rooftop Terrace
The final act of the house is the rooftop terrace. It’s pure fantasy up here. You can feel the early rumblings of what would later become Gaudí’s signature forms. Turrets. Chimneys. Stripes. Curves. High above the house, the rooftop unfolds into a 150-square-meter open-air space that feels like a quiet sanctuary above the bustle of the street. Of that area, 85 square meters belong to Gaudí’s original design, an architectural fragment from the early 1880s, while the remaining space came later, added during Serra’s thoughtful expansion.

The two halves of the terrace tell their own distinct stories through their structure. Gaudí’s portion is sloped and sculptural, made up of four inclined planes resting on the wooden beams of the attic below. The surface is tiled with traditional curved Arab-style roofing tiles, creating that familiar ripple of terracotta across the top. Cutting through this sloped surface is a narrow circular pathway, formed from fired ceramic tiles. This walkway loops across the roof, leading you toward two key features: the vibrant chimneys and a small shrine tucked into one corner.


The chimneys, true to Gaudí’s artistic sensibilities, are not just functional vents but sculptural features in their own right. Constructed from brick and entirely covered in glossy ceramic tiles, they echo the same visual language as the shrines and add vertical rhythm to the terrace landscape.

Near the entrance to this rooftop world, you’ll also find a remnant from the past: the original gate from Carolinas Street. This ironwork portal once marked the main southeast-facing entrance to the house before the 1925 renovations shifted everything around. Although no longer in use, the gate still retains its charm, featuring circular floral motifs that evoke the naturalist style of the home’s early days.

Casa Vicens isn’t Gaudí at his most monumental; it’s Gaudí at his boldest and most curious, still testing the edges of what architecture could be. That’s part of its magic. It feels like stepping into the pages of an idea, alive with colour and possibility, before the rest of the world knew what he was capable of. I hope this tour helped you see a different side of Gaudí, more personal, more playful. And as you walk back out onto the streets of Gràcia, take a moment to glance back at the house. You’ll see it the way you did at first, but now with new eyes, and a deeper sense of wonder.
Happy Travels, Adventurers








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